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301 Censorship, cancel culture, and the First Amendment — why local publishers can’t afford to look away

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

Release Date: 09/19/2025

309 Stars and Stripes at a crossroads: Inside its mission, press freedom challenges and digital future show art 309 Stars and Stripes at a crossroads: Inside its mission, press freedom challenges and digital future

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

For more than 160 years, Stars and Stripes has walked a razor-thin line: serving the U.S. military while holding it accountable. Publisher Max Lederer says that balance remains as vital — and as fragile — as ever, noting that “our staff are paid by the Department of Defense” even as the newsroom is mandated to stay “balanced, objective, independent and impartial.” Today, new Pentagon access rules, collapsing trust in media, and seismic digital shifts are putting that independence to the test. Lederer argues the mission endures because “we are dedicated to telling the story of the...

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308 Jim Slusher on rebuilding trust — and why his new book aims to “nudge the world” show art 308 Jim Slusher on rebuilding trust — and why his new book aims to “nudge the world”

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

For nearly five decades, Jim Slusher has been one of the Midwest’s most thoughtful voices on what journalism owes its readers — and how it earns their trust. As managing editor for opinion at the Daily Herald, he’s spent his career pulling back the curtain on newsroom decisions and defending the value of open, honest dialogue. Now, with his new book To Nudge the World, Slusher is challenging both journalists and audiences to rethink how truth and trust are built in an era of noise and doubt. His message is clear: transparency isn’t a luxury for journalism — it’s the lifeline that...

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307 Why visuals still matter: Inside NPPA’s fight for the future of photojournalism show art 307 Why visuals still matter: Inside NPPA’s fight for the future of photojournalism

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

In a world overwhelmed by AI-generated imagery and shrinking newsroom budgets, the value of authentic photojournalism has never been more at risk — or more essential. The National Press Photographers Association is sounding the alarm: visuals aren’t just decoration, they’re the backbone of truth, trust, and emotional connection in journalism. In this exclusive interview, NPPA Vice President Lauren Steinbrecher and Grady College’s Mark E. Johnson break down why local publishers, students, and reporters must fight for the future of visual storytelling. Because if we lose the image, we...

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306  The Medill Report on local news: More urgency than optimism show art 306 The Medill Report on local news: More urgency than optimism

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

Local news is collapsing at an alarming pace — more than 3,500 newspapers have vanished since 2005, with 130 disappearing just last year. In this episode, we interview Tim Franklin and Zach Metzger of Northwestern’s Medill School of Journalism, the researchers behind the 2025 State of Local News report, which paints a dire picture of vanishing watchdogs, expanding news deserts, and a shrinking connection between journalism and the communities it serves. Yet amid the bleak data are signs of reinvention, from public radio stations stepping up to statewide networks and philanthropic...

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305 Best‑selling author & journalist Beth Macy returns home in Paper Girl show art 305 Best‑selling author & journalist Beth Macy returns home in Paper Girl

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

Journalist & best‑selling author Beth Macy returns to the town she once delivered newspapers in to ask: what happens when the civic fabric fractures and no one is left to tell the story? In her new memoir Paper Girl: A Memoir of Home and Family in a Fractured America, Macy digs into her hometown of Urbana, Ohio — exploring how the collapse of local news, growing economic despair and social isolation reshaped a community she loved. Along the way, she argues that if journalism disappears from small‑town America, the consequences are national. Her message is clear: local reporting...

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304 State of Local News 2025: Smartphones surge, content creators rise, and only 15% pay show art 304 State of Local News 2025: Smartphones surge, content creators rise, and only 15% pay

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

Local news is changing faster than anyone imagined — and Northwestern University’s Medill School just put numbers to the chaos. Its new State of Local News 2025 report reveals a seismic shift: smartphones have overtaken TV, content creators now rival traditional outlets, and only 15% of Americans say they’re willing to pay for local journalism. For Medill’s Tim Franklin and Stephanie Edgerly, the findings are both a wake-up call and a roadmap for survival. The future of local news, they warn, depends on how fast publishers adapt to audiences who’ve already moved on.   Access...

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303 Local publisher fights back after county strips legal notices in retaliation show art 303 Local publisher fights back after county strips legal notices in retaliation

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

What happens when a county government tries to silence its watchdog? In Pender County, North Carolina, officials yanked away the Post and Voice’s legal notices — a critical revenue lifeline — not because the paper failed to fulfill its duty, but because it did. Publisher Andy Pettigrew called out backroom deals and ran biting editorial cartoons, prompting the commissioners to strike back. Now, the fight has moved from the courthouse steps to federal court, raising a chilling First Amendment question: If politicians can punish a paper for speaking the truth, what local newsroom is safe?...

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302 Nicole Russell, USA Today’s conservative voice, on why opinion journalism still matters show art 302 Nicole Russell, USA Today’s conservative voice, on why opinion journalism still matters

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

Polarization isn’t just dividing dinner tables anymore — it’s turning deadly in the wake of the Charlie Kirk tragedy and now the ICE office shooting in Dallas. The role and responsibility of opinion journalism has never been more scrutinized. That’s why we turned to Nicole Russell, one of USA Today’s leading conservative voices, who has spent more than a decade writing on politics, culture, and policy. She has also written for The Washington Examiner and The Federalist, consistently offering a sharp conservative perspective on some of the most hotly debated issues of our time. In our...

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301 Censorship, cancel culture, and the First Amendment — why local publishers can’t afford to look away show art 301 Censorship, cancel culture, and the First Amendment — why local publishers can’t afford to look away

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

When billion-dollar networks like CBS and ABC cave to political pressure and late-night stars like Colbert and Kimmel get muzzled, what chance does a small-town publisher have? If Washington can bend the most prominent players in media, local newspapers — already stretched thin by lawsuits, advertiser boycotts, and the rise of AI — are staring down an even harsher storm. That’s why Bob Corn-Revere, one of America’s top First Amendment lawyers, warns now is the moment to stiffen spines. “A spine is a terrible thing to waste,” he said — and for publishers, wasting it could mean...

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300  After the Kirk shooting, Peter Laufer warns: Journalism is more dangerous than ever show art 300 After the Kirk shooting, Peter Laufer warns: Journalism is more dangerous than ever

"E & P Reports" from Editor & Publisher Magazine hosted by Mike Blinder

In a world where speaking out can result in being silenced forever, journalism itself is under attack. Hours before this conversation was taped, commentator and podcaster Charlie Kirk was gunned down at an event at Utah Valley University — a stark reminder that public voices, whether political or journalistic, face real and rising danger. Against that backdrop, Dr. Peter Laufer, world-traveling journalist, author and editor of the new book “Don't Shoot the Journalists: Migrating to Stay Alive,” joined E&P Reports to explore what’s at stake when reporters are exiled, threatened or...

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When billion-dollar networks like CBS and ABC cave to political pressure and late-night stars like Colbert and Kimmel get muzzled, what chance does a small-town publisher have? If Washington can bend the most prominent players in media, local newspapers — already stretched thin by lawsuits, advertiser boycotts, and the rise of AI — are staring down an even harsher storm. That’s why Bob Corn-Revere, one of America’s top First Amendment lawyers, warns now is the moment to stiffen spines. “A spine is a terrible thing to waste,” he said — and for publishers, wasting it could mean losing the last line of defense for democracy.

Access more at this episode’s landing page, at:

https://www.editorandpublisher.com/stories/networks-under-fire-and-what-it-means-for-local-publishers,257824